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	<title>Shea Stadium memories</title>
	<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/907/SheaStadiummemories/</link>
	<description>Share your memories of Shea Stadium as it prepares to shut its doors after 44 seasons.</description>
	<pubDate>2008-09-18 13:54:09</pubDate>
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		<title>Farewell to Shea: A Fan's Perspective</title>
		<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/thread/6501/</link>
		<guid>6501</guid>
		<description>September 28, 2008 had been marked on my calendar since the 2008 schedule was announced. I had to go to the farewell party at the ballpark that had filled my boyhood with many joyful moments that are forever etched in mind. I found a pair of reasonably priced tickets on eBay. The Met game itself was not a priority; it was all about experiencing Shea one last time.  I had been to Shea earlier in the summer for the Billy Joel concert but, alas that did not have the same feeling of a baseball game. There were no vendors hawking their hot dogs and beer, and no hot pretzel on the way out of the stadium. It has been over forty years since that first trip to Shea in June of 1968, with my Cub Scout pack # 57 from Farmingdale, NY. I was well armed that day with my brown bag lunch, scorecard, and pencil. We didn&amp;rsquo;t care that we were sitting in the upper deck; we had binoculars to check out our heroes. There was Tom Seaver warming up in the bullpen, Bud Harrelson fielding some grounders off the fungo bat of Yogi Berra, in the batting cage was Cleon Jones, and Tommie Agee was waiting his turn. Finally, I saw Gil Hodges bring out the lineup card to the umps at home plate. The game was a bigger thrill this day because Tom Seaver, &amp;ldquo;The Franchise&amp;rdquo; was the starting pitcher. The details of the game have long ago faded away, except for the fact that Seaver struck out the side 1-2-3 in the first inning, and that the Mets won the game.  Today, the LIRR train was full of Mets fans, young and old, as we made our way to Shea. It was a historical sight to see from the platform, Shea Stadium next to the new Citi Field. The past and the future next to each other, one full of memories, the other waiting for its inaugural opening day. The outside of stadium was full of fans who were wearing Mets paraphernalia from all different Mets eras. We were all rooting for another Met memorable victory for the Shea finale. The parking lots were full of tailgaters and fans were shouting, &amp;ldquo;Lets Go Mets&amp;rsquo; or singing the Mets&amp;rsquo; theme song. &amp;ldquo;MEET THE METS, Step right up and greet the Mets&amp;hellip;&amp;hellip;East side,West side,everybody's coming down to meet the M-E-T-S Mets of New York town!Of New York town.&amp;rdquo;  It was electric walking into the stadium. I was accompanied to the game by my cousin Joe Schmitt Jr., son on my Uncle Joe who instilled into all of my cousins and siblings that we were descendants of Brooklyn Dodger fans and that meant we were destined to be Met fans. The Yankees were the enemy and not to be rooted for. As we entered the entrance to our section, the beautiful green grass of Shea was to be admired. The infield was covered by a tarp to shield it from the light rain. As I looked out, I could see Joe Namath throwing the football to Don Maynard on a fly pattern, Tommie Agee diving and making those two outstanding catches in the &amp;rsquo;69 World Series, Eddie Kranepool waiting to pinch hit in the on deck circle, Seaver looking out to center after his imperfect game was broken up, Jerry Koosman jumping into Jerry Grote&amp;rsquo;s arms, Tug McGraw slapping his thigh with his glove, Ray Knight scoring the winning run in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series, Jesse Orosco throwing his glove into the air, Doc Gooden striking out another hitter, or Darryl hitting a monster home run.  Oh, the thrills Shea has provided over the years! Before the game, I saw all the old Mets getting off the bus to enter the Stadium; Franco, Koosman, Swoboda, Harrelson, Kingman, Boswell, Leiter, Piazza, Carter, Mays, Kranepool, Seaver, Staub, Doc, Strawberry, were among the many on hand to say good bye to the Flushing ballpark. It surely must have meant something for these bygone stars to come and say goodbye. Unfortunately, the 2008 Met club disappointed the electric crowd with a loss in the final game at Shea. It was doubly frustrating because the loss caused the Mets to miss the playoffs, as they say in Mudville the mighty Casey has struck out. After the game there was a ceremony with the old Met players paying a final homage to Shea. That was nice but, I couldn&amp;rsquo;t wait to get outside and buy my pretzel.  Goodbye Shea, and thanks for the memories!</description>
		<pubDate>2008-09-30 14:38:29</pubDate>
		<author>TonyS3 &lt;forumuser@vmix.com&gt;</author>
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		<title>Thanks for the Memories</title>
		<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/thread/6490/</link>
		<guid>6490</guid>
		<description>I was 15 in 1963 and saw one game at the Polo Grounds.  I took my younger brother, Greg, to the second game ever at Shea against the Pirates.  The outfield had such drainage problems that during batting practice a pop fly sank about six inches into the ground.  We were at the twi-night doubleheader (1965?) where Rob Gardner pitched and the game went scoreless for 17 innings.  Had to be made up the next day as a double header.  We spent that night at my grandmother's in Flushing.  I think we saw 48 innings of baseball in less than 25 hours.Then, in 1969, I was 17-0 at Shea.  Saw Seaver's near-perfect game against the Cubs.  The night we first ever went into first place against the Expos.  The night we won the division title against the Cards.  Game 3 when we won the pennant against the Braves.  And Game 5 when we won the World Championship against the Orioles.Shea, thanks for the memories!</description>
		<pubDate>2008-09-30 07:00:46</pubDate>
		<author>nymets41 &lt;forumuser@vmix.com&gt;</author>
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		<title>most memorable moment at Shea </title>
		<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/thread/6435/</link>
		<guid>6435</guid>
		<description>I was about 14 years old when I went to the game on Willie Mays night. Mays was my idol and I can honesty tell you that that was an emotional night for me. I Remember my dad telling me about Mays &amp;quot;now that's a ball player&amp;quot;, I only wish that I was Mays in his prime.</description>
		<pubDate>2008-09-26 17:26:23</pubDate>
		<author>captain-crunch &lt;forumuser@vmix.com&gt;</author>
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		<title>Mets beat Koufax for first time</title>
		<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/thread/6428/</link>
		<guid>6428</guid>
		<description>I was at the game in August of '65 with some of my buddies when the Mets beat Sandy Koufax for the first time.  We sat along the third base line and froze (night game).  Highlights included the fact that a young Tug McGraw beat Koufax.  Not many people remember that Tug came up that summer AND that he was a starting pitcher, at least at first.  Danny Napolean hit a homer off Koufax to dead Center...pretty good shot!  Wonder where he is?  He didn't last long -- like many Mets of that era.I have lived outside Philadelphia for 21 years.  McGraw was a beloved figure around here, deservedly, by all accounts a good man.  His death was too early and tragic.  Funny thing: the Philadelphia media played up his &amp;quot;Ya Gotta Believe!&amp;quot; anthem that characterized the 1980 Phillies WS Championship team.  Very few people seemed to recall -- or developed sudden amnesia on the subject -- that Tug first popularized that phrase during the Mets' 1973 Pennant-Winning Season.  </description>
		<pubDate>2008-09-25 13:14:14</pubDate>
		<author>philsy51 &lt;forumuser@vmix.com&gt;</author>
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		<title>Mets' frst playoff tickets EVER</title>
		<link>http://forum.newsday.com/forums/thread/6420/</link>
		<guid>6420</guid>
		<description>It was 1969, September to be exact, and my assignment was to be on line at Shea for the first sale of Mets playoff tickets. It was 7 years after the start of the Mets and no one figured there would be a World Series in the Mets' near future.The old Long Island Press sent me to the ballpark to do a story on the fans on line. The next day's headline for the story was &amp;quot;Shambles at Shea.&amp;quot;Fans broke through centerfield fence at 1 in the morning and 600 of them got onto the field without security. Some one put on the lights and I couldn't believe it. Games of frisbee went on in the outfield, fans sat in the stands and on the outfield wall and 12 guys drove the Mets bullpen cart across the field. Other fans went to the dugouts and looked for bats and balls. To top it all off, a pretzel vender drove his truck through the centerfield entrance and sold pretzels in the first base coach's box.It was UNREAL  </description>
		<pubDate>2008-09-25 06:55:21</pubDate>
		<author>Fillingspace &lt;forumuser@vmix.com&gt;</author>
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